THE ENNEAGRAM: A TOOL FOR TRANSFORMATION
The Enneagram is a powerful and profound self-development system. It forms the basis for a highly accurate typology that describes nine distinct personality types and serves as a sense-making framework for understanding the human ego and mapping out a growth process. As a psychological and spiritual model that lays out specific paths of self-development, it helps us wake up to ourselves by revealing the habitual patterns and blind spots that limit our growth and transformation.
Principled Reformer
Type Ones are disciplined, self-controlled, principled, objective, conscientious, structured, discerning, idealistic, and practical. They get motivated by the effort to do the right thing and improve themselves and the world around them. This means they monitor their own behavior and sometimes that of others and try to conform to an inner set of rules and ideals. They see things in terms of "right and wrong" and apply themselves diligently to whatever they do. They typically find it difficult to relax and allow themselves to experience pleasure.
Strategic Supporter
Type Twos are relationship-oriented, empathetic, generous, thoughtful, helpful, caring, and self-sacrificing. They want to feel liked by and connected to others, so they seek approval through pleasing and supporting the people around them. Twos are motivated by a desire to be important to those who are important to them. They focus attention on reading and providing what others need, sometimes unconsciously hoping their efforts will be reciprocated. They excel at empowering and adapting to others but may have a harder time recognizing and expressing their own needs.
Productive Performer
Type Threes are achievement driven, results-oriented, efficient, hardworking, image-conscious, adaptable, charming, and driven. Motivated to be seen as competent and successful, they express a strong drive to meet goals, make things happen, and look good doing it. Threes automatically read the room and shape-shift to become what others view as successful. They can be highly work focused, getting caught up in constantly "doing", in part as an unconscious way to avoid emotions. They may automatically avoid engaging their emotions, as they may fear being emotional will threaten their image and productivity level.
Authentic Creative
Type Fours are individualistic, self-expressive, attuned to aesthetics, romantic, nostalgic, emotional, and introspective. They get motivated by a desire to feel understood by and connected to others and can be sensitive to disconnection or not feeling seen and understood. they value authenticity and tend to experience and be more comfortable with a wider range of emotions than other types, including pain. Fours compare themselves to others and often have an underlying sense that they are more special than others or that they are more flawed than others - or both.
Analytical Specialist
Type Fives are cerebral, observant, independent-minded, curious, unsentimental, self-sufficient, and objective. They have a strong need to maintain control over their own private space, time, and energy. Motivated to gain knowledge through continually learning, their intellectual approach can make them appear distant. However, they can be engaged and thoughtful, even if they don't share it. Their natural interest in information often leads them to become experts in their chosen field. Highly independent, they seek to conserve their energy out of a fear of depletion and so may avoid emotional interactions.
Skeptical Troubleshooter
Type Sixes are analytical, responsible, vigilant, inquisitive, doubtful, skeptical, careful, and safety conscious. Motivated to minimize their anxiety through planning and preparing for problems before they happen, they tend to see the world as unsafe and threatening and think in terms of "worst case" scenarios. Naturally vigilant when it comes to detecting threats, they are either actively fearful (phobic) or rebellious, strong, and intimidating (counter-phobic) as a proactive move against fear. When they feel safe enough to develop trust, Sixes work hard and demonstrate loyalty and commitment, but may also see problems where they don't necessarily exist.
Enthusiastic Visionary
Type Sevens are positive, fun-loving, future-focused, optimistic, adventurous, spontaneous, innovative, and enthusiastic. Motivated to keep the mood "up" out of a desire to avoid emotional pain (sometimes unconsciously), they continually reframe negatives into positives to sustain a sense of freedom from limitations and maintain an upbeat mental perspective. They focus their attention on fun, pleasure, and stimulating things to do and think about. They dislike feeling limited or controlled by outside forces, but may not see how their need to escape from any kind of control or constraint can also lead to self-limiting habits.
Powerful Challenger
Type Eights are assertive, action-oriented, direct, strong, caring, pragmatic, determined, and decisive. Motivated by a desire to feel the intensity of life that comes through facing big challenges and expressing power in the world, they can be excessive or impulsive. At their best, they make things happen in service of a bold vision that empowers others. When less self-aware, they can be controlling or aggressive and not see the impact of over using their power and strength. They are natural leaders with a blind spot when it comes to expressing vulnerability.
Modest Mediator
Type Nines tend to be calm, patient, steady, agreeable, easygoing, supportive, diplomatic, conflict-avoidant, trusting, and positive. Motivated to maintain an atmosphere of harmony, they adapt to others rather than asserting themselves. Excellent listeners who easily see the views of others, they usually have a hard time knowing what they want and making decisions because they focus more on their external environment than their internal world. They adopt a "go along to get along" approach to stay comfortable by preventing disharmony.
The content on this page is written by:
Beatrice Chestnut and Uranio Paes, CP Enneagram Academy.
Copyright © 2025 Wendy Busby Coaching - All Rights Reserved.
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